The war against terror (continued)

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Monty Hobbs - Nov 16, 2001 11:27 AM ( 1. )

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Yes

Doug,

Indeed. "War" time often galvanizes people into such a supposed unity against a supposedly easily identifiable enemy that they not only tolerate such erosions, but encourage them.

The Taliban had originally been at least verbally open (how much sincere tehy were is another issue) to turning Osama bin Laden over to an Islamic court, but the U.S. said no. The U.S. wants to be both police and judge on a geopolitical scale. Imagine if that were the case in the courts you and I might be subject to. The police officer who claims you are the murder gets to determine your guilt or innocence and decide on your punishment.

Chris - Nov 18, 2001 08:23 PM ( 6.1 )

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Hmmm, I guess a contradiction in higher ethical standards vs acts of terroism. No matter what the act of terror, internal or external I find no ethics in the type of suppression internally or attacks externally in the attempt to defends their beliefs.


Well yes! But what I meant was that we'll need to develop cross-culture consensus on ethical standards in order to prevent exactly those things. Of course, until they are prevented they'll need to be suppressed.

  • The Islamic culture needs to evolve and open up if it doesn't want to be overrun by the western culture.
  • Christian culture is evolving at a much faster pace and foundamentalistic Christians do not have a qualified minority that would help them to prevent that because our culture isn't threatened.
  • Islamic foundamentalists DO have a qualified minority that provides them with moral support, because that minority feels bullied and threatend by a US attitude that they see as imperialistic and suppressive (westernism).
  • That's why the terrorist attacks are to be interpreted as against westernism - not against western civilisation.
  • The US could change their attitude without compromising their values. It's a question of communicative skills and consideration for the other culture.
  • This will allow the development of a cross-culture consensus on ethic principals, where the negative differences will disappear and the positive differences will be celebrated.
  • One end result will have to be that all cultures show restrain when operating within another culture, in order to not endanger the peaceful evolution of the other culture.

    There are two other scenarios:

    We could slip into chaotic dark ages where religious fanatics on all sides force the intellectual development to freeze in numbness.

    Or western civilisation could overrun all other cultures completely and cause the cultural flavors (including the Christian one) to fade. If this happens, many people will have a major spiritual void that they will need to fill by joining religious splinter groups. These groups will form again a qualified minority that will fuel fanatic sects that operate in the underground and we'll have the same problem all over again.

    Besides, it would be sad to loose the cultures as strong elements that give societies their unique flavors. There is nothing wrong with spirituality. Science provides knowledge - but their is another side to the coin. Our societies should stay intouch with what we don't know, too.

  • Sue - Nov 18, 2001 11:56 PM ( 6.1.1 )

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    One end result will have to be that all cultures show restrain when operating within another culture, in order to not endanger the peaceful evolution of the other culture.


    Sounds like the Prime Directive


    doug - Nov 19, 2001 01:45 AM ( 6.1.1.1 )

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    Sue writes:

    "Sounds like the Prime Directive "


    And finding some good excuse to break the Prime Directive formed the core plot of how many episodes?

    doug


    If you are not part of the solution you are part of the precipitate.

    Sue - Nov 19, 2001 05:23 AM ( 6.1.1.1.1 )

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    Doug:

    And finding some good excuse to break the Prime Directive formed the core plot of how many episodes?


    Janeway, on Kirk's generation: (pretty close paraphrase - I just saw this episode the other night)

    "It was different then... They were a little less eager to invoke the Prime Directive and a little more eager to draw their phasers. Of course, the whole lot of them would be drummed out of Starfleet today. Still, what I wouldn't give to ride shotgun with some of those officers..."


    Jeff Porten - Nov 25, 2001 12:54 PM ( 6.1.2 )

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    More violent disagreements

    But what I meant was that we'll need to develop cross-culture consensus on ethical standards in order to prevent exactly those things.


    I think that the first rule of culture is that you'll never come to a consensus on anything. That's why we have international law to deal with how nations deal with each other, and we leave national law up to each nation. There are enough cultural disagreements between Europeans ; you expect to come to a global consensus? There's a reason why you don't see the UN being run on Quaker meeting rules.

    The Islamic culture needs to evolve and open up if it doesn't want to be overrun by the western culture.


    So, how is saying that Islamic culture "needs to do" anything NOT imperialistic and bullish, Chris?

    Christian culture is evolving at a much faster pace and foundamentalistic Christians do not have a qualified minority that would help them to prevent that because our culture isn't threatened.


    OK, that's the second or third time you've used that phrase, and can I just say how much that bothers me? I don't know about you, but *I* don't live in a Christian culture. I'm Jewish, my culture is secular. Lots of people in my culture are Christian, of course, and twice a year they tend to jam this down my throat, which makes me rude and irritable and extremely Scrooge-like.

    But please don't tell me that Christian culture is any better than Islamic culture. Every time I've seen a Christian culture in action, it's tended to be as repressive and militant as the worst examples of Islamic cultures.

    That's why the terrorist attacks are to be interpreted as against westernism - not against western civilisation.


    Ok, let's be clear. The terrorist attacks were against 4,603 PEOPLE from around 60 different nations. Not against westernism, not against western civilization, but against people. Any other description begins the process of rationalization and desensitization.

    The US could change their attitude without compromising their values. It's a question of communicative skills and consideration for the other culture.


    This isn't about culture. Trust me, if Switzerland were harboring bin Laden and refused to negotiate, we'd probably be bombing the hell out of you. We were perfectly happy with the Taliban for the past five years, for better or for worse.

    Chris - Nov 27, 2001 10:51 PM ( 6.1.2.1 )

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    Jeff writes:
    There are enough cultural disagreements between Europeans; you expect to come to a global consensus?


    Yes, most certainly I do!!! There is a cross-cultural consensus on ethics that could be reached ( http://www.uni-tuebingen.de/stiftung-weltethos/ ). And the political model that could administer this exists as well: The sovereign individual as the foundation, delegating power based on subsidiarity and at any of those levels governing together in concordance.

    So, how is saying that Islamic culture "needs to do" anything NOT imperialistic and bullish, Chris?


    If we tell them that they need to change, it's imperialistic. If we encourage them to evolve, it's not.

    I don't know about you, but *I* don't live in a Christian culture. I'm Jewish, my culture is secular. Lots of people in my culture are Christian, of course, and twice a year they tend to jam this down my throat, which makes me rude and irritable and extremely Scrooge-like.


    I understand. But just step back a bit and look at the full picture. The jewish culture has a long history of existing 'surrounded' by the christian one (being more or less tolerated at different times). I believe there is nobody that knows that better than the Jews. The secularization was made possible mainly by the enlightenment which allowed the individual to turn against institutionalized religion. The secular model that is so dominating at this time is one that evolved out of christianity. I'm not saying that it could not have or would not have evolved from Judaism or any other religion - but it was the christian reformation that did it. I'm no Christian and the 'secular' label that you prefer to use is fine with me. In the context of my postings it was however important to point out that the christian culture had an easier time to allow a secular society to evolve than it is now the case for the Islamic culture.

    But please don't tell me that Christian culture is any better than Islamic culture. Every time I've seen a Christian culture in action, it's tended to be as repressive and militant as the worst examples of Islamic cultures.


    I agree, Jeff - I agree!

    Ok, let's be clear. The terrorist attacks were against 4,603 PEOPLE from around 60 different nations. Not against westernism, not against western civilization, but against people. Any other description begins the process of rationalization and desensitization.


    I don't think you're serious about that. It was a highly symbolic act by an extremist believe system against another believe system.

    This isn't about culture. Trust me, if Switzerland were harboring bin Laden and refused to negotiate, we'd probably be bombing the hell out of you.


    We're harboring Mark Rich - that causes already enough trouble

    Bin Laden is a symptom - not the problem. The problem IS about culture.

    We were perfectly happy with the Taliban for the past five years, for better or for worse.


    I think the international community including the US has been negotiating with the Taliban about handing out bin Laden since 1997. But yes, the US certainly had its hand in getting the Taliban to power in the first place (unintentionally).

    Jeff Porten - Nov 28, 2001 07:16 AM ( 6.1.2.1.1 )

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    There is a cross-cultural consensus on ethics that could be reached ( http://www.uni-tuebingen.de/stiftung-weltethos/ ). And the political model that could administer this exists as well: The sovereign individual as the foundation, delegating power based on subsidiarity and at any of those levels governing together in concordance.


    Chris, at least here in the US, there's a sort of osmotic membrane between how political scientists look at the world, and how "regular educated people" look at the world. Your language is on the other side of my membrane.

    Don't get me wrong, I'm proud of my academic background and I like to talk theory when it's appropriate. I also believe that theory can get in the way sometimes, as I'll point out below.

    In any case, that's the context for what I'm about to say: I went to the site, saw that tenet #4 was "the transformation of consciousness!" and immediately dismissed the document, sight unseen. It's written in a language designed to be dismissed as crackpot here.

    The jewish culture has a long history of existing 'surrounded' by the christian one (being more or less tolerated at different times). I believe there is nobody that knows that better than the Jews.


    Actually, we have a far better track record of being tolerated by Muslims than Christians. It was the Christians who historically expelled and massacred us. And it's not lost on many Jews that we didn't get our own nation-state until we adopted the militaristic and oppressive tenets of our adversaries.

    I don't think you're serious about that. It was a highly symbolic act by an extremist believe system against another believe system.


    And I don't believe you're serious about THAT. A symbolic attack could have been done with FedEx jets at 2 AM, with loss of life in the dozens. This is where academia gets in the way of intelligence; the symbolism, whatever might have been intended, is utterly dwarfed and made meaningless by the loss of life.

    Bin Laden is a symptom - not the problem. The problem IS about culture.


    Bin Laden is a mass murderer. You can call him symptom, problem, cause, or cup of Swiss chocolate, and I really don't care.

    Where I *will* be glad to argue with you is about what things made the US in general and the WTC in particular the focus of the attack. I still think it's because we have the audacity to be rich while the world is poor, and because we have a society that values freedom of movement over security and hence made these ripe, juicy targets.

    Our culture is more or less dominating the world in exported media and promotion of free trade. We weren't attacked by the Chinese, the Russians, the Africans, or anyone else whose culture is threatened. We weren't attacked by the Islamic nations of Bosnia, Pakistan, or Saudi Arabia. We were attacked by a deranged madman whose wealth and political protection gave him the opportunity to lash out.

    Any chance bin Laden might have had for a fair hearing of his views, he forfeited. I don't care if he actually is channeling the word of God. To try to understand how he thinks -- to even acknowledge that he has a point of view -- is to encourage others to use the same means to gain the attention of the world stage.

    But yes, the US certainly had its hand in getting the Taliban to power in the first place (unintentionally).


    No, it was pretty intentional. There's all sorts of documentation that the rise of the Taliban is exactly the sort of blowback caused by poorly designed US policies. Bin Laden's first training camps were built by the CIA for the Taliban when it was us against the Soviets. This is exactly the sort of thing that should cause the "tapping on the shoulder" of the US that I wrote about earlier.

    Chris - Nov 29, 2001 12:51 AM ( 6.1.2.1.1.1 )

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    Jeff writes:
    Chris, at least here in the US, there's a sort of osmotic membrane between how political scientists look at the world, and how "regular educated people" look at the world. (...) I went to the site, saw that tenet #4 was "the transformation of consciousness!" and immediately dismissed the document, sight unseen. It's written in a language designed to be dismissed as crackpot here.


    OK. Can we translate the core message to the other side of that membrane?

    Background references:
  • United Nations Year of Dialogue Among Civilizations
  • SECRETARY-GENERAL ANNOUNCES MEMBERSHIP OF GROUP OF EMINENT PERSONS FOR YEAR OF DIALOGUE AMONG CIVILIZATIONS
  • Declaration Toward a Global Ethic

    The following are some bits and pieces from the latter document:

    <Quote>

    From: The Principles of a Global Ethic

    Time and again we see leaders and members of religions incite aggression, fanaticism, hate, and xenophobia - even inspire and legitimize violent and bloody conflicts. Religion often is misused for purely power-political goals, including war. We are filled with disgust.

    We confirm that there is already a consensus among the religions which can be the basis for a global ethic - a minimal fundamental consensus concerning binding values , irrevocable standards , and fundamental moral attitudes.

    (...)

    By a global ethic we do not mean a global ideology or a single unified religion beyond all existing religions, and certainly not the domination of one religion over all others. By a global ethic we mean a fundamental consensus on binding values, irrevocable standards, and personal attitudes. Without such a fundamental consensus on an ethic, sooner or later every community will be threatened by chaos or dictatorship, and individuals will despair.

    (...)

    Historical experience demonstrates the following: Earth cannot be changed for the better unless we achieve a transformation in the consciousness of individuals and in public life. The possibilities for transformation have already been glimpsed in areas such as war and peace, economy, and ecology, where in recent decades fundamental changes have taken place. This transformation must also be achieved in the area of ethics and values! Every individual has intrinsic dignity and inalienable rights, and each also has an inescapable responsibility for what she or he does and does not do. All our decisions and deeds, even our omissions and failures, have consequences.



    Can you point out more precisely where that membrane comes into play when reading the above?

    And did your 'osmotic membrane' comment also pertain to my statement regarding the system...

    The sovereign individual as the foundation, delegating power based on subsidiarity and at any of those levels governing together in concordance.


    ...or did it only pertain to the world ethos site?

    Jeff writes:
    the symbolism, whatever might have been intended, is utterly dwarfed and made meaningless by the loss of life.


    Sorry, but I don't think that is the case, unfortunately. But let's move on.

    I still think it's because we have the audacity to be rich while the world is poor, and because we have a society that values freedom of movement over security and hence made these ripe, juicy targets.


    I don't think it's because of ANYTHING you have or are. It's because of what THEY do NOT want to have or be!

    Any chance bin Laden might have had for a fair hearing of his views, he forfeited.


    I am not suggesting that we negotiate with terrorists. We need to suppress terrorism. But we also have to address the problem... we need to build consensus with their society so the 'qualified minority' disappears that provides them with the 'legitimatization' for terrorism.

  • doug - Nov 18, 2001 08:42 PM ( 7. )

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    Chris writes:

    "The Islamic culture needs to evolve and open up if it doesn't want to be overrun by the western..."


    Getting on very thin ice here, but... Islam seems to me to be the religion least likely to ever "open up"...

    doug


    If you are not part of the solution you are part of the precipitate.

    Chris - Nov 18, 2001 08:46 PM ( 7.1 )

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    Yes, Islam has some built in machanisms that are designed to prevent it from evolving. But as with so many things in religion, there are a few open doors that leave room for interpretation.

    doug - Nov 18, 2001 08:51 PM ( 7.1.1 )

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    Chris writes:

    "Yes, Islam has some built in machanisms that are designed to prevent it from evolving. But as with so many things in religion, there are a few open doors that leave room for interpretation."


    The ones I know of are:

    (1) Unlike the Judeo-Christian Bible, which is taken to be "inspired by God and written by man", the Koran is taken to be the literal word of God, memorized by the prophet Mohammed and transcribed literally word for word - thus leaving less room, if any, for interpretation.

    (2) Unlike the Judeo-Christian Bible, which foresees new prophets, the Koran imposes a lock-down feature that demands that Mohammed be recognized as the final prophet and that the Koran be the last word.

    Any others?

    doug


    If you are not part of the solution you are part of the precipitate.

    Chris - Nov 18, 2001 08:58 PM ( 7.1.1.1 )

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    There is some room for interpretation whenever the Koran has various laws that apply to a situation and the Koran isn't clear as to the order or preference that should be given to the various laws. But that's about it, I think.

    Jeff Porten - Nov 25, 2001 12:56 PM ( 7.1.1.2 )

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    Not quite

    You're being unfair, Doug. Orthodox Jews and fundamentalist Christians all believe that their bibles are the literal word of God. In fact, the defining line between Orthodox, Conservative, and Reform Judiasm is how they view and interpret the Old Testament.

    doug - Nov 26, 2001 12:49 PM ( 7.1.1.2.1 )

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    Jeff writes:

    "Orthodox Jews and fundamentalist Christians all believe that their bibles are the literal word of God."


    I thought the Ten Commandments were supposed to be the only literal words of God in the Old Testament.

    doug


    If you are not part of the solution you are part of the precipitate.

    Jeff Porten - Nov 28, 2001 06:32 AM ( 7.1.1.2.1.1 )

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    It's just the only words He signed.

    AFAIK, the ten commandments were the only incidence of God actually WRITING something. But the entire Bible is said to be written by people who were "inspired" by God, which is to say that the words are His even though the anonymous people who held the quills were human.

    Anyway, the formal divisions between the Jewish groups, in case it helps:

    1) Orthodoxers believe that the Bible is the word of God, and all rules laid down in Biblical times are now and forever inviolate.

    2) Conservatives believe that the Bible was a set of rules given at a certain period of history, and that they may be interpreted for the present day based on the original intent of the laws.

    3) Reformers believe that the rules in the Bible were valid in their day, but that some rules no longer apply and others may be interpreted.

    Hence the whole "word of God" idea varies widely. Note that no Jews "interpret" the ten commandments; the rules I talk about are the myriad others scattered about.

    Keeping kosher's a good example: Reform Jews almost never keep kosher, on the theory that it was meant as a public health code that no longer applies. Conservatives keep kosher to feel more adherent to the laws, but don't feel a requirement to do so. Orthodoxers always keep kosher, as it's the rule.

    Michael D.Landis - Nov 28, 2001 06:49 AM ( 7.1.1.2.1.1.1 )

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    Keeping kosher's a good example: Reform Jews almost never keep kosher, on the theory that it was meant as a public health code that no longer applies. Conservatives keep kosher to feel more adherent to the laws, but don't feel a requirement to do so. Orthodoxers always keep kosher, as it's the rule.


    This is incorrect. Specifically, the values and view of halacha imputed to Reform and Conservative Jews are wrong. I can't imagine a more bizarre forum to discuss kashrut than WebX Harbor, but I wanted to point that out.


    Jeff Porten - Nov 28, 2001 06:55 AM ( 5.1.2.1.1 )

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    Sorry, that's a tad too vague

    The problem with the term "presidential" is that it doesn't MEAN anything. Clinton was always presidential, even as he did things that are inimical to being president. Meanwhile, Carter was rarely presidential, but did all of the business of the presidency quite well.

    So once you remove the word "president" from "presidential", you're left with zero meaning. In my experience, "presidential" is a word the media use when they have nothing left to say but have to fill up airtime regardless. When non-media people use it, they're parroting what they've heard to sound informed.

    Watch GW Bush on cspan.org the day after the attacks, when he's in an undisclosed location, eyes wide with fear and stammering, and tell me that's presidential.

    And in answer to your question: what made Bush more electable than Quayle? Two things: 1) Bush had money, Quayle didn't. Bush had so much money that most of his opponents dropped out because of THAT before any actual campaigning started.

    2) Quayle had an image as an unlovable idiot. Bush had an image as a lovable idiot. Had Bush not been the front-runner, I suspect that he would have appeared much less lovable in his common portrayals, but once it became clear that he was the standard bearer for the party, the Republicans adopted stupidity as being more American than anyone who had the audacity to be educated at Harvard. (Whoops -- my mistake, that's where BUSH went to school. See my point?)

    So, with 'presidental' I'm not referring to professional qualifications but to the symbolic status that the presidency has in the US society.


    Again, that's fairly vague. Herbert Hoover set out to be presidential the way history dictated it, and didn't notice he was living at a time when something new was required.

    Essentially, we want only a few things from a president: 1) make us feel safe, 2) make us feel listened to, 3) make us feel powerful and proud. Clinton was popular because he never forgot those things. Bush runs the risk of losing on all three.

    Chris - Nov 28, 2001 09:42 PM ( 5.1.2.1.1.1 )

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    Jeff writes:
    The problem with the term "presidential" is that it doesn't MEAN anything.


    What I meant by it was the sum of all adjectives that the american public associates with a candidate and that they think 'qualifies' him/her for the job. As opposed to the qualification in the professional sense.

    Quayle had an image as an unlovable idiot. Bush had an image as a lovable idiot.


    Thanks, Jeff! That's exactly what I mean. Some american people saw Gore as an unlovable unidiot and Bush as a lovable idiot. And they valued the 'lovable' adjective higher over the 'idiot' adjective when determining who was more 'presidential'.

    Would be nice if the US system would have allowed a Gore/Nader coalition. 9/11 'just maybe might' never have happened.

    Jeff Porten - Dec 19, 2001 08:40 PM ( 5.1.2.1.1.1.1 )

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    Belated reply

    Chris --

    Sorry I've never responded to your posts. This is the first time in a while I've checked messages far enough to get here.

    Would be nice if the US system would have allowed a Gore/Nader coalition. 9/11 'just maybe might' never have happened.


    Seeing as how Nader spent all of last year spouting how Gore was no better than Bush, I can understand why the Dems wouldn't touch him with a 10-foot pole. I voted for Nader (in a Gore-safe state) out of sympathy for the Greens, but based on how the horror stories about the Green vote tipping Bush into office all came true, and Nader's deplorable post-election comments, I'm never voting for them again.

    In any case, I think any analysis that says that we were attacked because of Bush is way short of the mark. And I'm a Bush antagonist.

    Michael D.Landis - Dec 19, 2001 09:41 PM ( 5.1.2.1.1.1.1.1 )

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    In any case, I think any analysis that says that we were attacked because of Bush is way short of the mark. And I'm a Bush antagonist.


    I agree that making simplistic cause-effect statements are, well, simplistic. However...

    If the Congress and the Special Persecutor's office hadn't kept over 100 FBI agents tied up for years sniffing Clinton's panties...

    If Bush hadn't ignored the Kerry (?) commission report on terrorism, delivered last April, that concluded a large-scale terror attack on US territory was imminent and suggested several simple, cheap, common-sense security enhancements...

    If the Republican Congress hadn't ridiculed and stifled Clinton's attempts to tighten airport and immigration security after the first WTC bombing...

    If, as recently as this summer, INS hadn't unaccountably released a bin Laden relative with close ties to the Bush family being held on an immigration violation and investigated for links to terrorist groups...

    ...who knows?

    Tim - Nov 18, 2001 08:17 AM ( 6. )

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    but a contradiction in which way?


    Hmmm, I guess a contradiction in higher ethical standards vs acts of terroism. No matter what the act of terror, internal or external I find no ethics in the type of suppression internally or attacks externally in the attempt to defends their beliefs.

    As far as Nader goes, I just think he would be a lose canon. I don't have specific examples off the top of my head, its just my opinion.

    I think that the Bush presidnecy has carefully evaulated each move and action. Again a good support staff factor.

    Bush is not the best public speaker, However that is not the total presidency. I think theres a lot more to it than that. Look at Clinton, He was an excellant public speaker, But his actions were the embarassment.


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    Chris - Nov 18, 2001 08:23 PM ( 6.1 )

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    Hmmm, I guess a contradiction in higher ethical standards vs acts of terroism. No matter what the act of terror, internal or external I find no ethics in the type of suppression internally or attacks externally in the attempt to defends their beliefs.


    Well yes! But what I meant was that we'll need to develop cross-culture consensus on ethical standards in order to prevent exactly those things. Of course, until they are prevented they'll need to be suppressed.

  • The Islamic culture needs to evolve and open up if it doesn't want to be overrun by the western culture.
  • Christian culture is evolving at a much faster pace and foundamentalistic Christians do not have a qualified minority that would help them to prevent that because our culture isn't threatened.
  • Islamic foundamentalists DO have a qualified minority that provides them with moral support, because that minority feels bullied and threatend by a US attitude that they see as imperialistic and suppressive (westernism).
  • That's why the terrorist attacks are to be interpreted as against westernism - not against western civilisation.
  • The US could change their attitude without compromising their values. It's a question of communicative skills and consideration for the other culture.
  • This will allow the development of a cross-culture consensus on ethic principals, where the negative differences will disappear and the positive differences will be celebrated.
  • One end result will have to be that all cultures show restrain when operating within another culture, in order to not endanger the peaceful evolution of the other culture.

    There are two other scenarios:

    We could slip into chaotic dark ages where religious fanatics on all sides force the intellectual development to freeze in numbness.

    Or western civilisation could overrun all other cultures completely and cause the cultural flavors (including the Christian one) to fade. If this happens, many people will have a major spiritual void that they will need to fill by joining religious splinter groups. These groups will form again a qualified minority that will fuel fanatic sects that operate in the underground and we'll have the same problem all over again.

    Besides, it would be sad to loose the cultures as strong elements that give societies their unique flavors. There is nothing wrong with spirituality. Science provides knowledge - but their is another side to the coin. Our societies should stay intouch with what we don't know, too.

  • Sue - Nov 18, 2001 11:56 PM ( 6.1.1 )

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    One end result will have to be that all cultures show restrain when operating within another culture, in order to not endanger the peaceful evolution of the other culture.


    Sounds like the Prime Directive


    doug - Nov 19, 2001 01:45 AM ( 6.1.1.1 )

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    Sue writes:

    "Sounds like the Prime Directive "


    And finding some good excuse to break the Prime Directive formed the core plot of how many episodes?

    doug


    If you are not part of the solution you are part of the precipitate.

    Sue - Nov 19, 2001 05:23 AM ( 6.1.1.1.1 )

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    Doug:

    And finding some good excuse to break the Prime Directive formed the core plot of how many episodes?


    Janeway, on Kirk's generation: (pretty close paraphrase - I just saw this episode the other night)

    "It was different then... They were a little less eager to invoke the Prime Directive and a little more eager to draw their phasers. Of course, the whole lot of them would be drummed out of Starfleet today. Still, what I wouldn't give to ride shotgun with some of those officers..."


    Jeff Porten - Nov 25, 2001 12:54 PM ( 6.1.2 )

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    More violent disagreements

    But what I meant was that we'll need to develop cross-culture consensus on ethical standards in order to prevent exactly those things.


    I think that the first rule of culture is that you'll never come to a consensus on anything. That's why we have international law to deal with how nations deal with each other, and we leave national law up to each nation. There are enough cultural disagreements between Europeans ; you expect to come to a global consensus? There's a reason why you don't see the UN being run on Quaker meeting rules.

    The Islamic culture needs to evolve and open up if it doesn't want to be overrun by the western culture.


    So, how is saying that Islamic culture "needs to do" anything NOT imperialistic and bullish, Chris?

    Christian culture is evolving at a much faster pace and foundamentalistic Christians do not have a qualified minority that would help them to prevent that because our culture isn't threatened.


    OK, that's the second or third time you've used that phrase, and can I just say how much that bothers me? I don't know about you, but *I* don't live in a Christian culture. I'm Jewish, my culture is secular. Lots of people in my culture are Christian, of course, and twice a year they tend to jam this down my throat, which makes me rude and irritable and extremely Scrooge-like.

    But please don't tell me that Christian culture is any better than Islamic culture. Every time I've seen a Christian culture in action, it's tended to be as repressive and militant as the worst examples of Islamic cultures.

    That's why the terrorist attacks are to be interpreted as against westernism - not against western civilisation.


    Ok, let's be clear. The terrorist attacks were against 4,603 PEOPLE from around 60 different nations. Not against westernism, not against western civilization, but against people. Any other description begins the process of rationalization and desensitization.

    The US could change their attitude without compromising their values. It's a question of communicative skills and consideration for the other culture.


    This isn't about culture. Trust me, if Switzerland were harboring bin Laden and refused to negotiate, we'd probably be bombing the hell out of you. We were perfectly happy with the Taliban for the past five years, for better or for worse.

    Chris - Nov 27, 2001 10:51 PM ( 6.1.2.1 )

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    Jeff writes:
    There are enough cultural disagreements between Europeans; you expect to come to a global consensus?


    Yes, most certainly I do!!! There is a cross-cultural consensus on ethics that could be reached ( http://www.uni-tuebingen.de/stiftung-weltethos/ ). And the political model that could administer this exists as well: The sovereign individual as the foundation, delegating power based on subsidiarity and at any of those levels governing together in concordance.

    So, how is saying that Islamic culture "needs to do" anything NOT imperialistic and bullish, Chris?


    If we tell them that they need to change, it's imperialistic. If we encourage them to evolve, it's not.

    I don't know about you, but *I* don't live in a Christian culture. I'm Jewish, my culture is secular. Lots of people in my culture are Christian, of course, and twice a year they tend to jam this down my throat, which makes me rude and irritable and extremely Scrooge-like.


    I understand. But just step back a bit and look at the full picture. The jewish culture has a long history of existing 'surrounded' by the christian one (being more or less tolerated at different times). I believe there is nobody that knows that better than the Jews. The secularization was made possible mainly by the enlightenment which allowed the individual to turn against institutionalized religion. The secular model that is so dominating at this time is one that evolved out of christianity. I'm not saying that it could not have or would not have evolved from Judaism or any other religion - but it was the christian reformation that did it. I'm no Christian and the 'secular' label that you prefer to use is fine with me. In the context of my postings it was however important to point out that the christian culture had an easier time to allow a secular society to evolve than it is now the case for the Islamic culture.

    But please don't tell me that Christian culture is any better than Islamic culture. Every time I've seen a Christian culture in action, it's tended to be as repressive and militant as the worst examples of Islamic cultures.


    I agree, Jeff - I agree!

    Ok, let's be clear. The terrorist attacks were against 4,603 PEOPLE from around 60 different nations. Not against westernism, not against western civilization, but against people. Any other description begins the process of rationalization and desensitization.


    I don't think you're serious about that. It was a highly symbolic act by an extremist believe system against another believe system.

    This isn't about culture. Trust me, if Switzerland were harboring bin Laden and refused to negotiate, we'd probably be bombing the hell out of you.


    We're harboring Mark Rich - that causes already enough trouble

    Bin Laden is a symptom - not the problem. The problem IS about culture.

    We were perfectly happy with the Taliban for the past five years, for better or for worse.


    I think the international community including the US has been negotiating with the Taliban about handing out bin Laden since 1997. But yes, the US certainly had its hand in getting the Taliban to power in the first place (unintentionally).

    Jeff Porten - Nov 28, 2001 07:16 AM ( 6.1.2.1.1 )

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    There is a cross-cultural consensus on ethics that could be reached ( http://www.uni-tuebingen.de/stiftung-weltethos/ ). And the political model that could administer this exists as well: The sovereign individual as the foundation, delegating power based on subsidiarity and at any of those levels governing together in concordance.


    Chris, at least here in the US, there's a sort of osmotic membrane between how political scientists look at the world, and how "regular educated people" look at the world. Your language is on the other side of my membrane.

    Don't get me wrong, I'm proud of my academic background and I like to talk theory when it's appropriate. I also believe that theory can get in the way sometimes, as I'll point out below.

    In any case, that's the context for what I'm about to say: I went to the site, saw that tenet #4 was "the transformation of consciousness!" and immediately dismissed the document, sight unseen. It's written in a language designed to be dismissed as crackpot here.

    The jewish culture has a long history of existing 'surrounded' by the christian one (being more or less tolerated at different times). I believe there is nobody that knows that better than the Jews.


    Actually, we have a far better track record of being tolerated by Muslims than Christians. It was the Christians who historically expelled and massacred us. And it's not lost on many Jews that we didn't get our own nation-state until we adopted the militaristic and oppressive tenets of our adversaries.

    I don't think you're serious about that. It was a highly symbolic act by an extremist believe system against another believe system.


    And I don't believe you're serious about THAT. A symbolic attack could have been done with FedEx jets at 2 AM, with loss of life in the dozens. This is where academia gets in the way of intelligence; the symbolism, whatever might have been intended, is utterly dwarfed and made meaningless by the loss of life.

    Bin Laden is a symptom - not the problem. The problem IS about culture.


    Bin Laden is a mass murderer. You can call him symptom, problem, cause, or cup of Swiss chocolate, and I really don't care.

    Where I *will* be glad to argue with you is about what things made the US in general and the WTC in particular the focus of the attack. I still think it's because we have the audacity to be rich while the world is poor, and because we have a society that values freedom of movement over security and hence made these ripe, juicy targets.

    Our culture is more or less dominating the world in exported media and promotion of free trade. We weren't attacked by the Chinese, the Russians, the Africans, or anyone else whose culture is threatened. We weren't attacked by the Islamic nations of Bosnia, Pakistan, or Saudi Arabia. We were attacked by a deranged madman whose wealth and political protection gave him the opportunity to lash out.

    Any chance bin Laden might have had for a fair hearing of his views, he forfeited. I don't care if he actually is channeling the word of God. To try to understand how he thinks -- to even acknowledge that he has a point of view -- is to encourage others to use the same means to gain the attention of the world stage.

    But yes, the US certainly had its hand in getting the Taliban to power in the first place (unintentionally).


    No, it was pretty intentional. There's all sorts of documentation that the rise of the Taliban is exactly the sort of blowback caused by poorly designed US policies. Bin Laden's first training camps were built by the CIA for the Taliban when it was us against the Soviets. This is exactly the sort of thing that should cause the "tapping on the shoulder" of the US that I wrote about earlier.

    Chris - Nov 29, 2001 12:51 AM ( 6.1.2.1.1.1 )

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    Jeff writes:
    Chris, at least here in the US, there's a sort of osmotic membrane between how political scientists look at the world, and how "regular educated people" look at the world. (...) I went to the site, saw that tenet #4 was "the transformation of consciousness!" and immediately dismissed the document, sight unseen. It's written in a language designed to be dismissed as crackpot here.


    OK. Can we translate the core message to the other side of that membrane?

    Background references:
  • United Nations Year of Dialogue Among Civilizations
  • SECRETARY-GENERAL ANNOUNCES MEMBERSHIP OF GROUP OF EMINENT PERSONS FOR YEAR OF DIALOGUE AMONG CIVILIZATIONS
  • Declaration Toward a Global Ethic

    The following are some bits and pieces from the latter document:

    <Quote>

    From: The Principles of a Global Ethic

    Time and again we see leaders and members of religions incite aggression, fanaticism, hate, and xenophobia - even inspire and legitimize violent and bloody conflicts. Religion often is misused for purely power-political goals, including war. We are filled with disgust.

    We confirm that there is already a consensus among the religions which can be the basis for a global ethic - a minimal fundamental consensus concerning binding values , irrevocable standards , and fundamental moral attitudes.

    (...)

    By a global ethic we do not mean a global ideology or a single unified religion beyond all existing religions, and certainly not the domination of one religion over all others. By a global ethic we mean a fundamental consensus on binding values, irrevocable standards, and personal attitudes. Without such a fundamental consensus on an ethic, sooner or later every community will be threatened by chaos or dictatorship, and individuals will despair.

    (...)

    Historical experience demonstrates the following: Earth cannot be changed for the better unless we achieve a transformation in the consciousness of individuals and in public life. The possibilities for transformation have already been glimpsed in areas such as war and peace, economy, and ecology, where in recent decades fundamental changes have taken place. This transformation must also be achieved in the area of ethics and values! Every individual has intrinsic dignity and inalienable rights, and each also has an inescapable responsibility for what she or he does and does not do. All our decisions and deeds, even our omissions and failures, have consequences.



    Can you point out more precisely where that membrane comes into play when reading the above?

    And did your 'osmotic membrane' comment also pertain to my statement regarding the system...

    The sovereign individual as the foundation, delegating power based on subsidiarity and at any of those levels governing together in concordance.


    ...or did it only pertain to the world ethos site?

    Jeff writes:
    the symbolism, whatever might have been intended, is utterly dwarfed and made meaningless by the loss of life.


    Sorry, but I don't think that is the case, unfortunately. But let's move on.

    I still think it's because we have the audacity to be rich while the world is poor, and because we have a society that values freedom of movement over security and hence made these ripe, juicy targets.


    I don't think it's because of ANYTHING you have or are. It's because of what THEY do NOT want to have or be!

    Any chance bin Laden might have had for a fair hearing of his views, he forfeited.


    I am not suggesting that we negotiate with terrorists. We need to suppress terrorism. But we also have to address the problem... we need to build consensus with their society so the 'qualified minority' disappears that provides them with the 'legitimatization' for terrorism.

  • doug - Nov 18, 2001 08:42 PM ( 7. )

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    Chris writes:

    "The Islamic culture needs to evolve and open up if it doesn't want to be overrun by the western..."


    Getting on very thin ice here, but... Islam seems to me to be the religion least likely to ever "open up"...

    doug


    If you are not part of the solution you are part of the precipitate.

    Chris - Nov 18, 2001 08:46 PM ( 7.1 )

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    Yes, Islam has some built in machanisms that are designed to prevent it from evolving. But as with so many things in religion, there are a few open doors that leave room for interpretation.

    doug - Nov 18, 2001 08:51 PM ( 7.1.1 )

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    Chris writes:

    "Yes, Islam has some built in machanisms that are designed to prevent it from evolving. But as with so many things in religion, there are a few open doors that leave room for interpretation."


    The ones I know of are:

    (1) Unlike the Judeo-Christian Bible, which is taken to be "inspired by God and written by man", the Koran is taken to be the literal word of God, memorized by the prophet Mohammed and transcribed literally word for word - thus leaving less room, if any, for interpretation.

    (2) Unlike the Judeo-Christian Bible, which foresees new prophets, the Koran imposes a lock-down feature that demands that Mohammed be recognized as the final prophet and that the Koran be the last word.

    Any others?

    doug


    If you are not part of the solution you are part of the precipitate.

    Chris - Nov 18, 2001 08:58 PM ( 7.1.1.1 )

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    There is some room for interpretation whenever the Koran has various laws that apply to a situation and the Koran isn't clear as to the order or preference that should be given to the various laws. But that's about it, I think.

    Jeff Porten - Nov 25, 2001 12:56 PM ( 7.1.1.2 )

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    Not quite

    You're being unfair, Doug. Orthodox Jews and fundamentalist Christians all believe that their bibles are the literal word of God. In fact, the defining line between Orthodox, Conservative, and Reform Judiasm is how they view and interpret the Old Testament.

    doug - Nov 26, 2001 12:49 PM ( 7.1.1.2.1 )

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    Jeff writes:

    "Orthodox Jews and fundamentalist Christians all believe that their bibles are the literal word of God."


    I thought the Ten Commandments were supposed to be the only literal words of God in the Old Testament.

    doug


    If you are not part of the solution you are part of the precipitate.

    Jeff Porten - Nov 28, 2001 06:32 AM ( 7.1.1.2.1.1 )

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    It's just the only words He signed.

    AFAIK, the ten commandments were the only incidence of God actually WRITING something. But the entire Bible is said to be written by people who were "inspired" by God, which is to say that the words are His even though the anonymous people who held the quills were human.

    Anyway, the formal divisions between the Jewish groups, in case it helps:

    1) Orthodoxers believe that the Bible is the word of God, and all rules laid down in Biblical times are now and forever inviolate.

    2) Conservatives believe that the Bible was a set of rules given at a certain period of history, and that they may be interpreted for the present day based on the original intent of the laws.

    3) Reformers believe that the rules in the Bible were valid in their day, but that some rules no longer apply and others may be interpreted.

    Hence the whole "word of God" idea varies widely. Note that no Jews "interpret" the ten commandments; the rules I talk about are the myriad others scattered about.

    Keeping kosher's a good example: Reform Jews almost never keep kosher, on the theory that it was meant as a public health code that no longer applies. Conservatives keep kosher to feel more adherent to the laws, but don't feel a requirement to do so. Orthodoxers always keep kosher, as it's the rule.

    Michael D.Landis - Nov 28, 2001 06:49 AM ( 7.1.1.2.1.1.1 )

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    Keeping kosher's a good example: Reform Jews almost never keep kosher, on the theory that it was meant as a public health code that no longer applies. Conservatives keep kosher to feel more adherent to the laws, but don't feel a requirement to do so. Orthodoxers always keep kosher, as it's the rule.


    This is incorrect. Specifically, the values and view of halacha imputed to Reform and Conservative Jews are wrong. I can't imagine a more bizarre forum to discuss kashrut than WebX Harbor, but I wanted to point that out.

    Jeff Porten - Nov 28, 2001 07:20 AM ( 7.1.1.2.1.1.1.1 )

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    This is incorrect. Specifically, the values and view of halacha imputed to Reform and Conservative Jews are wrong. I can't imagine a more bizarre forum to discuss kashrut than WebX Harbor, but I wanted to point that out.


    I should point out at this point that my understanding of Judiasm is based upon what I learned in Reform and Conservative Hebrew schools, and could very well be inaccurate in any strict sense. (I would never use the word halacha in a sentence, for example; I only even know the word from context usage by my more religious friends.)

    In any case, what I posted is how it was explained to me when I was a young pup. My understanding is that there have been some "official" modifications in the intervening 20 years (last I heard, the Reform conference officially adopted stricter adherence to some rules), and I won't argue that what I was taught was, excuse the expression, holy writ in the first place.

    doug - Nov 28, 2001 02:00 PM ( 7.1.1.2.1.1.1.2 )

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    Kashrut debate :-)

    Michael writes:

    "This is incorrect. Specifically, the values and view of halacha imputed to Reform and Conservative Jews are wrong. I can't imagine a more bizarre forum to discuss kashrut than WebX Harbor, but I wanted to point that out."


    I don't know about Conservative, but I believe one of the reforms of the Reform movement was to not require adhering to rules of kashrut.

    Kashrut trivia!

    There are two animal products which are kosher, even though they come from living creatures which, themselves, are not kosher. What are those two animal products?

    doug


    If you are not part of the solution you are part of the precipitate.

    Jeff Porten - Nov 28, 2001 03:15 PM ( 7.1.1.2.1.1.1.2.1 )

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    There are two animal products which are kosher, even though they come from living creatures which, themselves, are not kosher. What are those two animal products?


    Rabbinically blessed bacon and unleavened lobster?

    doug - Nov 28, 2001 05:28 PM ( 7.1.1.2.1.1.1.2.1.1 )

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    Bzzzzzz.....

    Any other guesses?

    Give up?

    doug


    If you are not part of the solution you are part of the precipitate.

    Lisa - Nov 28, 2001 11:14 PM ( 7.1.1.2.1.1.1.2.2 )

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    Pizza anyone?

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    That is correct. There are some people who are Conservative who do practice Kosher though. I tend to be partially Kosher as I feel many of the laws came about when people ate from wooden dishes and the mixture of a meat product to a dish that had a milk product on it hours or days ago could be stomach turning.

    Michael D.Landis - Nov 28, 2001 11:31 PM ( 7.1.1.2.1.1.1.2.3 )

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    I don't know about Conservative, but I believe one of the reforms of the Reform movement was to not require adhering to rules of kashrut.


    That's correct, but the reasoning cited above for that decision is what I was objecting to.

    Oh, what the heck, previous comments about the suitability of the venue notwithstanding...

    Reform's decision to make kashrut optional had nothing to do with believing it to be an outmoded public health code. (No serious Jewish authority of any stripe believes that health ever had anything to do with kashrut - most likely it originally functioned as a way of separating the Hebrews from the "pagan" tribes by making it impossible to sit at table with them, thus severely limiting social interaction.) Rather, it's one instance of Reform's overarching decision that halacha has "a voice, not a veto" but that the individual's conscience is the ultimate guide.

    The Conservative movement, on the other hand, believes that halacha is dispositive, but also that halacha evolves with the living community of Jews. The individual is not free to disregard rules, but the community of scholars is responsible for re-interpreting halacha in light of new developments in society. Thus the Conservative acceptance of driving to synagogue on the Sabbath and the ordination of women, for example. (On the third hand, Orthodoxy [in my biased opinion] pretends that halacha is a static, unchanging body of laws while ignoring the long history of halachic change that created their movement.)

    Observance, of course, is an entirely different matter. Surveys show that the majority of people who identify as Conservative do not live a very observant lifestyle; in particular, something like only one fifth keep a kosher house.

    There are two animal products which are kosher, even though they come from living creatures which, themselves, are not kosher. What are those two animal products?


    There are any number of animal products for which this is true; once an animal extract has been processed beyond a certain point, it is declared to be no longer animal and hence outside the kashrut prohibitions.

    Jeff Porten - Nov 25, 2001 12:36 PM ( 8. )

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    Oh, PLEASE!

    Responding to a bunch of posts:

    "War" time often galvanizes people into such a supposed unity against a supposedly easily identifiable enemy that they not only tolerate such erosions, but encourage them.


    Right. The big problem here that few people seem to pay attention to is that this is such an ill-defined war that who's to say when things go back to "normal"? When the war in Afghanistan ends? When we pull back our troops from whatever post-Taliban government (or anarchy) ensues? When the terrorist threat is ended? (And how will be know that ?)

    The Taliban had originally been at least verbally open to turning Osama bin Laden over to an Islamic court, but the U.S. said no.


    Doug already argued with this point, but I just want to add -- I don't particularly agree with the Islamic way of thinking about these matters. And I don't particularly trust a court that would have been palatable to the Taliban.

    The U.S. wants to be both police and judge on a geopolitical scale. The police officer who claims you are the murder gets to determine your guilt or innocence and decide on your punishment.


    The answer, of course, is the International Criminal Court, which was created especially for matters such as these. Of course, the biggest stumbling block to the establishment of the ICC is the United States. How the Bush administration manages to pull this off without public outrage is beyond me.

    One more point -- there's just no doubt in my mind that the attack was of a scale that it can be called an act of war. Warfare is not justice, and while it follows international law, it DOESN'T necessarily have to abide by the US legal system. That's just the way it is: declare war, and you get to kill people without committing murder. That's one of the prerogatives of nation-states, and has been since Westphalia.

    On the other hand, we're now subverting our OWN legal system BECAUSE of the war. That's a whole 'nother story, and extremely dangerous.

    Unfortunately the US chose to show its uncommunicative, undemocratic, suppressive, ignorant, bullish, imperialistic attitude.


    Um, last time I checked, there was a rather large group of nations who were signed up for this conflict. If we were really all the things you said about us, would we have attempted to build such a coalition? Would we have even cared what you said if we didn't?

    You see, Chris, part of why most Americans are so immune to criticism is that we get criticized for EVERYTHING. If you want to criticize some aspect of our response, great, I'll listen to you. But painting us with such a broad brush just closes more ears and minds, and to be honest, it's the standard line I hear from most Europeans about us, regardless of what we're doing or the context.

    The attitude that got it into trouble in the first place. It's not the 'western civilisation' that is under attack, it is that US attitude. When islamic culture is endangered by 'westernism', it's clear that fundamentalist extremists will rise.


    Whoa whoa WHOA. Will you please explain how we attack Islamic culture? Can you name any other secular country that has as large an Islamic population as we do?

    Yes, we tend to disagree with cultures that are ruled by religious monarchies, and we have a natural bias towards democratic rule that is inimical to the "fiat by mullahs" process. But as was pointed out in the Washington Post the other day, our last wars were in defense of Kuwait and Bosnia, both Islamic countries.

    I wonder where we would be now in this regard if the US would have elected Ralph Nader rather than this behind the Bush guy.


    That was about as likely as Switzerland entering the war on the side of the Taliban. And we didn't elect Bush, we elected Gore; Bush just won due to election errors.

    If the Taliban say 'we want to negotiate' and the US say 'No, do what we said or we'll nuke you', it sends a message to the members of that other culture, that will fuel extremism.

    Chris - Nov 27, 2001 07:24 PM ( 8.1 )

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    Jeff writes:
    You see, Chris, part of why most Americans are so immune to criticism is that we get criticized for EVERYTHING. If you want to criticize some aspect of our response, great, I'll listen to you. But painting us with such a broad brush just closes more ears and minds, and to be honest, it's the standard line I hear from most Europeans about us, regardless of what we're doing or the context.


    Yes, you're absolutely right about that! But as I tried to clarify in subsequent posts, I intended to point out the way it is perceived on the receiving side, which - you probably agree - is as I described.

    The USA indeed IS seen to have that attitude. I know perfectly well that the US doesn't intend to have that attitude - but it is perceived to have it.

    I'm married to a US citizen... so, I do see it from both sides - rest assured!

    Whoa whoa WHOA. Will you please explain how we attack Islamic culture?


    I never claimed that the US does that. Islamic culture is in danger of being overpowered by the success of western culture. Again, this is the way they perceive it - I'm not claiming that western culture is intending to overpower Islamic culture. It's 'westernism' (the US attitude as they perceive it) that makes them think that.

    Can you name any other secular country that has as large an Islamic population as we do?


    Of course, that depends on your definition of 'secular country'. But in any case: The islamic population in the US is a perfect example of what that 'qualified minority' in Islamic cultures fears: To drowned in the underground of an agnostic christian culture. Again, (obviously I have to point this out all the time) that's the way they see it - I'm not claiming that it actually is that way. Often perception is everything!

    If the US would be able to further prevent the perception of an imperialistic attitude (did I arrive at the correct wording?), other cultures would not have a 'qualified minority' that gets fuelled by anti-westernism and would have an easier time to evolve - and the extremists wouldn't resort to terrorism.

    Jeff Porten - Nov 28, 2001 06:44 AM ( 8.1.1 )

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    If the US would be able to further prevent the perception of an imperialistic attitude (did I arrive at the correct wording?), other cultures would not have a 'qualified minority' that gets fuelled by anti-westernism and would have an easier time to evolve - and the extremists wouldn't resort to terrorism.


    Lots to debate in your post, Chris, but I'll stick to this. We can control what we do. We can temper what we do based on how we guess others will perceive us. But we can't control how others perceive us. How much bending over backward are we supposed to do to get people to like us?

    There's a great conservative columnist here named Charles Krauthammer who I almost never agree with, but who argues his points so well that I feel honor-bound to read his column. He recently pointed out that Islamic extremists attacked *us*, and *we're* the ones who have, in response: constantly reassured the Islamic nations of the world; sent aid and food to Islamic nations, and generally acted as if the Islamic people were the victims of the attack.

    His point: if Christian militants destroyed the Kaaba, every major Christian figure in the world would have immediately denouced the attack and its perpertrators as anti-Christian. Meanwhile, most major Islamic figures have remained silent. He has no explanation why, nor do I. But it somewhat informs my opinion of whether it's important or even possible to improve our image overseas.

    And I'll admit to a personal bias: everything I've read in the papers about the Arab press (and personal experience while travelling) indicates that most of their media is reminding their readers on a daily basis to hate people like me -- one of the Jews who dominates the United States and works daily to oppress the world. I'd be quite happy if an "agnostic christian culture" and a free objective press put an end to that.

    doug - Nov 28, 2001 01:56 PM ( 8.1.1.1 )

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    Jeff writes:

    "And I'll admit to a personal bias: everything I've read in the papers about the Arab press (and personal experience while travelling) indicates that most of their media is reminding their readers on a daily basis to hate people like me -- one of the Jews who dominates the United States and works daily to oppress the world."


    Did you receive your notification the day before not go to work at the World Trade Center?

    doug


    If you are not part of the solution you are part of the precipitate.

    Jeff Porten - Nov 28, 2001 03:13 PM ( 8.1.1.1.1 )

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    Did you receive your notification the day before not go to work at the World Trade Center?


    No... my subcommittee of the International Jewish Banking Conspiracy now telecommutes.

    Chris - Nov 28, 2001 08:52 PM ( 8.1.1.2 )

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    Jeff writes:
    How much bending over backward are we supposed to do to get people to like us?


    You can't get them to like you. By working together and building more and more consensus you can get them to hate you less. That's enough!

    Jeff Porten - Nov 28, 2001 06:35 AM ( 8.2 )

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    Question for Doug or Sue...

    my posts keep getting truncated. Is that happening on the server end or here in my browser? I'm not hitting an upper limit on textarea size.

    Sue - Nov 28, 2001 07:14 AM ( 8.2.1 )

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    I'm not aware of anybody else reporting that, and I haven't had it happen to me, so I suspect it's something on your end.


    Jeff Porten - Nov 28, 2001 07:22 AM ( 8.2.1.1 )

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    Hmm...

    IE 5.1 native on OS X. Have you ever posted a really long post? I'm assuming you're on the same software.

    Sue - Nov 28, 2001 07:24 AM ( 8.2.1.1.1 )

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    I usually use Opera...

    But I *have* used IS 5.1 on OSX. Doug uses that and I haven't heard him talk about it...


    Jeff Porten - Nov 28, 2001 07:30 AM ( 8.2.1.1.1.1 )

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    Next time I get loquacious...

    I'll post the message with Opera and see if it repeats.

    doug - Nov 28, 2001 02:02 PM ( 8.2.1.1.1.1.1 )

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    Jeff writes:

    "Next time I get loquacious..."


    You mean next time you get concise.

    doug


    If you are not part of the solution you are part of the precipitate.

    Jeff Porten - Nov 28, 2001 03:13 PM ( 8.2.1.1.1.1.1.1 )

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    You mean next time you get concise.


    I have many strong features, but brevity is not among them.

    doug - Nov 28, 2001 05:27 PM ( 8.2.1.1.1.1.1.1.1 )

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    Brevity

    At the end of a long letter to a friend, Blaise Pascal was said to have finished by writing:

    "I am sorry this letter is so long. I didn't have time to write a short one."


    If you are not part of the solution you are part of the precipitate.

    Jeff Porten - Nov 25, 2001 12:37 PM ( 9. )

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    Got clipped for some reason...

    If the Taliban say 'we want to negotiate' and the US say 'No, do what we said or we'll nuke you', it sends a message to the members of that other culture, that will fuel extremism.


    I think extremism will get fueled by whomever stands to benefit from it politically. I think the US will be target of extremism so long as we have the audacity to be the richest nation in the world, and to export the evidence of our wealth so obviously by dominating the world's mass media. Note that all of this occurs before we say word one about US policies or actions.

    What angers me most is that, for all of the bad things you can point at the US and accuse us of doing or NOT doing... can you name any other nation in history which amassed the power and influence which we currently enjoy, and which used it so benevolently? Visit any European museum to see centuries of paintings of massacres held when European nations were ascendant.

    Chris - Nov 27, 2001 07:35 PM ( 9.1 )

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    Jeff writes:
    I think extremism will get fueled by whomever stands to benefit from it politically.


    Yes, you're right. We will need to arrive at a world order where nobody will benefit from that! To a large extent this will be the US's responsibility!

    What angers me most is that, for all of the bad things you can point at the US and accuse us of doing or NOT doing... can you name any other nation in history which amassed the power and influence which we currently enjoy, and which used it so benevolently?


    No I can't. But don't let this get to your head! The reason why the US enjoys that power and influence is BECAUSE it is using it so benevolently!

    Jeff Porten - Nov 28, 2001 06:04 AM ( 9.1.1 )

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    Partial agreement

    Yes, you're right. We will need to arrive at a world order where nobody will benefit from that! To a large extent this will be the US's responsibility!


    I agree with you to some extent, but I also think that you need to cut us more slack.

    First of all, there will always be extremists, because there will always be extremes. In Saudi Arabia, an extremist is someone who walks down the street with a sign reading, "I politely disagree with the government." Here, it's legal to carry a sign saying, "Fsck Bush."

    In the US and Switzerland, violence is extremism. That's also a cultural construct, and also a Western construct (by which I mean, of course, that it's not EXCLUSIVELY Western, nor do we have any particular moral superiority because of it). Elsewhere, violence is the way of doing business. If you want to promote nonviolence, you have to be willing to say, "This is what my culture does, and in this respect I think my culture does it the right way and you should do the same."

    "But wait," Chris says, "I'm talking about the projection of violence overseas! Surely you don't suggest nonviolence is part of the US culture!"

    To which I'd respond that we have a somewhat schizophrenic way of dealing with our culture. If you're an American citizen, you have one set of rights; if you're not, you have a subset. If we're not at war, killing is murder; if we are, killing is rewarded. This despite the fact that our founding documents state that everyone is endowed by their Creator to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, regardless of birthplace or nationality.

    The simple fact is, the world has a millenia-long history of nations projecting power through force, and a much shorter and spottier history of nations projecting power through diplomacy and other means. The US believes that its power stems from its ability to project force, and that surely has the most immediate feedback of any use of power we have at our disposal.

    So while there are many of us in the US who work to someday end war -- on the rationale that there are many parts of the world where war is impossible (can you imagine a war between Geneva and Zurich? why not? rule of law) -- you also have to reflect that asking a superpower to change the way it looks at its role in the world is a BIG task.

    So what I'm asking is that you don't adopt the usual European tone of, "You Americans are barbarians. Do things the way we do, and beg us for our forgiveness." Better to lightly tap us on the shoulder and say, "Ahem. Are you aware that some of these problems might have been exacerbated by US actions in the past? You might want to think about that next time." And remember that there are Americans saying the same thing, and we need all the support we can get.

    Now, what I'd really like to hear from some non-English Europeans is the following: "You know, compared to how the Soviets conducted war in Afghanistan, or even how the Americans conducted war in Vietnam and Cambodia, they really are doing a better job . They really do act on their principles to some extent. So let's pat you on the back, acknowledge your improvements, and then talk about where you still need to rethink a few things."

    No I can't. But don't let this get to your head! The reason why the US enjoys that power and influence is BECAUSE it is using it so benevolently!


    Most Americans think that our power comes from our military, and that the world is free because we, personally, saved the world from the Nazis in WWII. A large plurality think that we, personally, saved the world from communism by "defeating" the Soviet Union. Many feel that the only thing preventing global anarchy is our ability to pretty much pave over any nation we choose, at any time.

    (continued)

    Jeff Porten - Nov 28, 2001 06:10 AM ( 9.1.1.1 )

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    Continuation

    Anti-American rhetoric is lost on these people, and political arguments meant to change US policy are doomed to fail if you forget that these people exist and determine our government and foreign policy. Positive change is achieved by working WITH these groups, not against them. ("You want the US to stop being called upon in foreign wars? Let me tell you about the proposal for a standing UN army.") And the rhetoric of many people outside the US makes the work of those of us on the inside MUCH harder.

    Chris - Nov 28, 2001 08:38 PM ( 9.1.1.1.1 )

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    Jeff Porten 11/28/01 6:10am

    This is exactly what I meant in regard to how 'the western world' needs to communicate with the Islamic culture. Except, that will be a hundred times more difficult and sensitive. But yes, Europeans too need to learn to communicate with US-Americans in a way that incourrages the US to evolve from and build on its own strenght - not slam them down. And vice-versa, actually!

    Chris - Nov 28, 2001 08:28 PM ( 9.1.1.2 )

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    Jeff Porten 11/28/01 6:04am

    Excellent post, Jeff. I fully agree with you. Just some minor comments that in no way are directed at the supstance of what you're saying:

    First of all, there will always be extremists, because there will always be extremes.


    But if extremists do not have a sufficiently large support group that backs there objective then they will not resort to terrorism.

    Can you imagine a war between Geneva and Zurich?


    Actually, I can yes! It's only 'not possible' as long as we remember that it IS possible and that we need to constantly work on consensus. If we fall into complacence and take it for granted, things could quickly escalate and shit could hit the fan before we know it. The same is true for a war between France and Germany, for example.

    Tim - Nov 25, 2001 04:01 PM ( 10. )

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    Tim, you work at a news organization. Surely you're aware that what people are saying -- when they hear on the news that everyone LOVES Bush -- are not necessarily their deepest held beliefs?

    Actually my point was in reference to outside news reporting. I was basing that statement on personal conversations Of course I not vouch for how people are forming their opinions. I wish I could remember the name but my mind is mush at the moment, but there was one big radio talk host that was totally anti Bush pro Gore that recently came out in favor of Bush stating the same that Gore was not the man for this job.

    Maybe Bush's simplistic speaking is refreshing to many americans, I think some people were ready for some one who speaks plain and simple.

    At anyrate, Bush is there, Gore is not, neither is Nader so we have what we have


    ForumBuilders.com.... If You Build it... They Will Come!

    Jeff Porten - Nov 28, 2001 06:25 AM ( 10.1 )

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    I think we're living in two different countries

    I wish I could remember the name but my mind is mush at the moment, but there was one big radio talk host that was totally anti Bush pro Gore that recently came out in favor of Bush stating the same that Gore was not the man for this job.


    I fail to understand any possible evidence that Al Gore would have not been a good leader during this crisis. Neither Bush nor Gore ever dealt with anything like this before, so who's to say HOW Gore would have responded?

    My personal assessment of Bush is that the "true" Bush is the one who appeared rarely before the cameras, and who had a deer-stuck-in-headlights palpable fear about him in the early days of the crisis. He's "fixed" that problem by getting decent scriptwriters to crib from Winston Churchill, and by having the right fascists for the job in Ashcroft, Ridge, and Thompson.

    If I could jump into my alternate universe machine and fetch you a CNN broadcast from the Al Gore presidency, I guarantee you that Gore would have CNN commentators falling all over themselves in amazement on how "humane and sensitive" he had become. Why? Because we're reading into the president the qualities we want to see in him. That sets us (and him) up for a big fall if we ever look for those qualities and see them stunningly missing.

    Maybe Bush's simplistic speaking is refreshing to many americans, I think some people were ready for some one who speaks plain and simple.


    In other words, John Q. Public wants "someone as dumb and uneducated about the big picture as I am?" Sorry, I don't buy it; we want capable leaders. We're just not that dumb.

    You want me to dig up my 2000 archive of times when Bush used "plain and simple" to cover up the fact that he simply didn't know what the hell he was talking about? Promising to cut carbon dioxide emissions when he meant to say carbon monoxide, then not backing down and making it a campaign plank, then abandoning BOTH in February, all spring to mind.

    At anyrate, Bush is there, Gore is not, neither is Nader so we have what we have


    And it doesn't cease to amaze me that although we have proof that a Gore win was intended in Florida, no one seems to care.

    john cornicello - Nov 28, 2001 07:55 AM ( 11. )

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    I don't think that Sue or Doug would see a limit. As I understand it, users have a size limit on messages. Hosts and sysops do not. At least it seems to work that way on my system.

    JC

    Jeff Porten - Nov 28, 2001 08:12 AM ( 11.1 )

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    Ah. Good point.

    So, Sue, just make me a sysop here and all my problems go away.

    Sue - Nov 28, 2001 08:43 AM ( 11.2 )

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    John, I just tested this and YOU'RE RIGHT! Believe it or not, I never knew that... <grin>


    Jeff Porten - Nov 28, 2001 03:11 PM ( 11.2.1 )

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    Actually, you documented this....

    It's in the Guide somewhere, or the Control Panel documentation. I just forgot.

    Anyway, if you're willing to bump up the character limit on posts, it'll save me some trouble.

    Sue - Nov 28, 2001 03:29 PM ( 11.2.1.1 )

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    bump up the character limit on posts


    Done


    Tim - Nov 28, 2001 03:26 PM ( 12. )

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    I fail to understand any possible evidence that Al Gore would have not been a good leader during this crisis

    It just my personal opinion... I have mine, You have yours, We're both entitled

    If I could jump into my alternate universe machine and fetch you a CNN broadcast from the Al Gore presidency, I guarantee you that Gore would have CNN commentators falling all over themselves in amazement on how "humane and sensitive" he had become. Why? Because we're reading into the president the qualities we want to see in him. That sets us (and him) up for a big fall if we ever look for those qualities and see them stunningly missing.

    Your opinion....

    And it doesn't cease to amaze me that although we have proof that a Gore win was intended in Florida, no one seems to care. .

    I believe the courts decided that case. Like it or not thats how is. There were a lot of inconsistencies in the Florida portion of the elections, Maybe they were all over the country, and florida just caught the limelight. I suspect things may be very different next time.

    I guess we'll just have to agree to disagree when it comes to Bush and Gore.


    ForumBuilders.com.... If You Build it... They Will Come!

    Jeff Porten - Nov 28, 2001 06:17 PM ( 12.1 )

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    Not really, Tim.

    You're right that "Gore would have done a good job" is pure opinion. But presidents getting popularity bumps in wartime is documented fact. And you only have to go back 10 years to see what happened to a politically popular wartime president named Bush who presided over a recession.

    As for the election, it's factual that more people intended to vote for Gore than Bush in Florida. (Recount statistics, plus even generous estimates for Bush on how many votes Gore lost due to the butterfly ballot. Mathematically, it's not even close.) It's factual that Gore received more votes than Bush in the general election.

    You're right that it's factual that Bush was handed the election legally by the courts; it's also factual that many legal experts looking at that opinion have said it will go down with Dred Scott as one of the worst (i.e., politically and personally motivated) decisions in Supreme Court history.

    It's my opinion that Bush is set up to be run out of town on a rail; there are just too many ways he can fall off his precipice, and I think he's got zero political experience in dealing with the hard times that are coming. The only question as to whether he'll pull off the next election is who the Democrats put up against him, and whether any Republicans try to unseat him, which I think is extremely likely. (Unless you think McCain has been lobotomized, or that a war hero won't be all that attractive.)

    doug - Nov 29, 2001 01:13 AM ( 13. )

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    Jeff writes:

    "There are any number of animal products for which this is true; once an animal extract has been processed beyond a certain point, it is declared to be no longer animal and hence outside the kashrut prohibitions."


    I believe it is just two. But please - go ahead and list more!

    doug


    If you are not part of the solution you are part of the precipitate.

    Michael D.Landis - Nov 29, 2001 04:27 AM ( 13.1 )

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    Actually, I wrote that, not Jeff.

  • Any* chemical which is ultimately derived from an animal fits this bill - the specific example I recall was something or other that's derived from beef bones that it was ruled may be included in dairy foods - but there must be hundreds of chemical food additives which qualify.

  • doug - Nov 29, 2001 10:03 AM ( 13.1.1 )

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    Well, I am talking about non-processed foodstuffs

    There are two which come from non-kosher living creatures and may be eaten directly and are considered kosher themselves.

    doug


    If you are not part of the solution you are part of the precipitate.

    doug - Dec 7, 2001 11:12 AM ( 14. )

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    What?!





    WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Attorney General John Ashcroft lashed out Thursday at critics of the administration's response to terrorism, saying questions about whether its actions undermine the Constitution only serve to help terrorists.


    If you are not part of the solution you are part of the precipitate.

    Monty Hobbs - Dec 8, 2001 04:02 AM ( 14.1 )

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    Yep

    Doug,

    That is what we made our main news discussion about today http://forums.triangle.com/WebX?50 .ee7e398

    Robin Grimes - Dec 8, 2001 06:36 AM ( 15. )

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    Smash forehead on keyboard to continue....

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    In my opinion.....

    It seems that the Taliban regime never expected that America would wage all out war. They expected us to whine and moan and debate and send letters of outrage. They never expected us to remove them from power and wipe out their government. The next Regime that supports a terrorist organization will look at what happened to the Taliban and think twice about allowing an attack on America.

    If they don't respect us then they can fear us...

    doug - Dec 15, 2001 04:19 PM ( 16. )

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    Forward this to John Ashcroft

    "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."


    -- Benjamin Franklin


    If you are not part of the solution you are part of the precipitate.

    doug - Dec 15, 2001 04:24 PM ( 17. )

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    Oh, Goodie, boys and girls!

    How nuclear bombs work.

    Complete with schematics.

    http://www.howstuffworks.com/nuclear-bomb.htm

    doug


    If you are not part of the solution you are part of the precipitate.

    Robin Grimes - Dec 20, 2001 02:09 AM ( 18. )

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    Smash forehead on keyboard to continue....

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    Yes there are many actions that could have been taken to help prevent the 9/11 attacks. However, you can't turn the lack of prevention into blame for the action. In the same vein that you can't blame me if my house gets robbed, because I didn't put bars on the windows and buy an attack dog. Lets not point fingers to the extent that we forget who the criminals are here.

    Doug, maybe I could build a nuclear bomb for home defense.

    And Jeff... Don't feel bad about your Nader vote. I voted for Ross Perot in 92, which put Mr. "I did not sleep with that woman." into office. Todays mistakes, tomorrows regrets.

    doug - Dec 21, 2001 04:12 PM ( 18.1 )

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    Robin writes:

    "Doug, maybe I could build a nuclear bomb for home defense."


    As long as you don't live in Chico, California. They have a city ordinance there prohibiting the detonation of nuclear devices.

    doug


    If you are not part of the solution you are part of the precipitate.

    Michael D.Landis - Dec 21, 2001 11:05 PM ( 18.1.1 )

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    But he just said he's going to build it, not detonate it. Isn't that the whole point of the MAD doctrine?

    I voted for Ross Perot in 92, which put Mr. "I did not sleep with that woman." into office. Todays mistakes, tomorrows regrets.


    And what a mistake that turned out to be. Eight years of peace and prosperity, an administration so ethical that not even 8 years, $100 million, and 100 FBI agents worth of investigation could turn up evidence of even one incident of criminal behavior related to official duties, and for entertainment a stumblingly inept attempted coup conceived, plotted, and misexecuted by the biggest bunch of sleazebags, liars, and hypocrites ever to grace the Beltway (and Pittsburg). Oh yeah, and blow jobs. Blow jobs are cool.

    Jeff Porten - Dec 23, 2001 08:36 PM ( 18.1.1.1 )

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    Ha ha ha ha ha!

    Oh, this is good. Here you can say blow jobs. Yesterday on the Apple WebX site, I couldn't post a message saying that I thought an application was sucking up CPU cycles.

    Monty Hobbs - Dec 22, 2001 12:48 AM ( 18.1.2 )

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    Fizz, boom

    Doug writes:

    As long as you don't live in Chico, California. They have a city ordinance there prohibiting the detonation of nuclear devices.


    Hmmmmm ... wonder if that prohibits placing a M-80 in a microwave?

    Not that I plan on it or anything .... though if I did live there, it would be tempting

    Jeff Porten - Dec 23, 2001 08:27 PM ( 18.2 )

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    Not exactly...

    And Jeff... Don't feel bad about your Nader vote. I voted for Ross Perot in 92, which put Mr. "I did not sleep with that woman." into office. Todays mistakes, tomorrows regrets.


    The Washington Post published an article about this a few months back. The basic gist is that there's a line of conservative thinking that says, "Well, OK, maybe you guys got rooked by a third party in 2000. But we got rooked in 1992, so it's all a wash."

    The problem with that line of thinking, the Post continued, is that it assumed that all Perot votes would have gone to Bush Senior. In fact, most vote analysis done at the time indicated that Perot votes drew slightly from Clinton, but the others wouldn't have voted at all; the drawn Bush votes weren't enough to tip.

    On the other hand, in this election, just about any number of votes would have tipped it, including the octogenarian lifelong Democratic Jewish voters who en masse decided to vote for Pat Buchanan.

    So I don't feel bad for my Nader vote because I voted in DC, which went for Gore by 85%. (We actually do get to vote for President -- but we still don't have Representatives or Senators, despite the fact that Congress frequently overturns local law. http://www.dcvote.org) The rest of your analysis, though, is a mite faulty.

    doug - Dec 22, 2001 12:31 PM ( 19. )

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    Compensation for damages caused by misdirect bombs in Afghanistan

    I am in favor of paying compensation to people who were hurt, families of people killed and people who suffered other losses due to misdirected U.S. bombs in Afghanistan. The so-called "collateral damage".

    There is precendence for this - the U.S. payed millions for their mistaken bombing of the Chinese Embassy in Serbia. What a disaster that was.

    I can't help but thinking - if Osama bin Laden were hiding out in the suburbs of, say, St. Louis, would the U.S. drop cluster bombs there as well?

    doug


    If you are not part of the solution you are part of the precipitate.

    Jeff Porten - Dec 23, 2001 08:35 PM ( 19.1 )

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    Interesting thought.

    But I'm not sure where to take that. Why would there necessarily be a statute of limitations on such compensation? We've inflicted collateral damage in every war -- Dresden, Hiroshima, and Nagasaki come to mind.

    On the other hand, we're the ones who are paying for the collateral damage inflicted here -- you don't see Al Qaeda lining up to reimburse its victims. And following that line of reasoning, we'd be rightfully able to plunder our vanquished enemies for such monies, an old wartime idea which has been thankfully laid to rest.

    In other words, this would further punish those nations who are currently (by and large) conducting their wars by the "rules" and by certain widely adopted notions of human decency. We care about not killing civilians and try not to do it -- nations that don't care quite so much would never be asked for this.

    And -- to open a big can of worms, I'm generally against the compensation funds that are being handed out to US victims of terrorism, currently pegged at about $1.6 million each. There's compassion, and then there's the buying off of the victims; I think we're veering into the latter category.

    But my big question is what sort of precedent are we setting for future attacks? If a nuclear bomb takes out Washington, are we going to be as generous to the 2.4 million victims? And if we aren't, do those victims then matter less?

    Michael D.Landis - Dec 23, 2001 10:50 PM ( 19.2 )

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    if Osama bin Laden were hiding out in the suburbs of, say, St. Louis, would the U.S. drop cluster bombs there as well?


    Ever been to East St. Louis? It looks like they already have.





    24.12.2001, 10:54

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